Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines
1.0
W3C Recommendation 3 February 2000
- This version:
-
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-ATAG10-20000203
- (plain text,
HTML gzip tar archive,
HTML zip archive,
PostScript,
PDF)
- Latest version:
-
http://www.w3.org/TR/ATAG10
- Previous version:
-
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/PR-WAI-AUTOOLS-19991026
- Editors:
- Jutta Treviranus -
ATRC,
University of Toronto
- Charles McCathieNevile -
W3C
- Ian Jacobs -
W3C
- Jan Richards - University of Toronto
Copyright ©2000
W3C
®
(
MIT
,
INRIA
, Keio),
All Rights Reserved. W3C
liability,
trademark,
document use and
software licensing rules apply.
This specification provides guidelines for Web authoring tool
developers. Its purpose is two-fold: to assist developers in
designing authoring tools that produce accessible Web content and
to assist developers in creating an accessible authoring
interface.
Authoring tools can enable, encourage, and assist users
("authors") in the creation of accessible Web content through
prompts, alerts, checking and repair functions, help files and
automated tools. It is just as important that all people be able
to author content as it is for all people to have access to it.
The tools used to create this information must therefore be
accessible themselves. Adoption of these guidelines will
contribute to the proliferation of Web content that can be read
by a broader range of readers and authoring tools that can be
used by a broader range of authors.
This document is part of a series of accessibility documents
published by the
W3C
Web Accessibility Initiative
(WAI).
This section describes the status of this document at the
time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this
document. The latest status of this document series is maintained
at the
W3C.
This document has been reviewed by W3C Members and other
interested parties and has been endorsed by the Director as a
W3C
Recommendation. It is a stable document and may be used as
reference material or cited as a normative reference from another
document. W3C's role in making the Recommendation is to draw
attention to the specification and to promote its widespread
deployment. This enhances the functionality and interoperability
of the Web.
A log of
changes between successive Working Drafts is available.
For further information about Working Group decisions, please
consult the minutes
of
AUWG Meetings.
This document has been produced by the
Authoring Tool Accessibility
Guidelines Working Group
(
AUWG) as part of the
Web Accessibility Initiative
(WAI). The
goals of the Working Group are discussed in the
AUWG
charter.
Please send general comments about this document to the public
mailing list:
w3c-wai-au@w3.org
(public
archives).
The English version of this specification is the only
normative version. Information about translations of this
document is available at
http://www.w3.org/WAI/AU/ATAG-TRANSLATIONS.
The list of known errors in this document is available at
http://www.w3.org/WAI/AU/ATAG-ERRATA.
Please report errors in this document to
wai-atag-editor@w3.org.
A list of current W3C Recommendations and other technical
documents including Working Drafts and Notes can be found at
http://www.w3.org/TR.
An appendix to this document [ATAG10-CHECKLIST]
lists all checkpoints for convenient reference.
In these guidelines, the term "authoring
tool" refers to the wide range of software used for
creating Web content, including:
- Editing tools specifically designed to produce Web content
(e.g., WYSIWYG HTML and XML editors);
- Tools that offer the option of saving material in a Web
format (e.g., word processors or desktop publishing
packages);
- Tools that transform documents into Web formats (e.g.,
filters to transform desktop publishing formats to HTML);
- Tools that produce multimedia, especially where it is
intended for use on the Web (e.g., video production and editing
suites, SMIL authoring packages);
- Tools for site management or site publication, including
tools that automatically generate Web sites dynamically from a
database, on-the-fly conversion tools, and Web site publishing
tools;
- Tools for management of layout (e.g., CSS formatting
tools).
The goals of this document can be stated as follows: that the
authoring tool be accessible to authors regardless of disability,
that it produce accessible content by default, and that it
support and encourage the author in creating accessible content.
Because most of the content of the Web is created using authoring
tools, they play a critical role in ensuring the
accessibility
of the Web. Since the Web is both a means of receiving
information and communicating information, it is important that
both the Web content produced and the authoring tool itself be
accessible.
To achieve these goals, authoring tool developers must take
steps such as ensuring conformance to accessible standards (e.g.,
HTML 4), checking and correcting accessibility problems,
prompting, and providing appropriate documentation and help. For
detailed information about what constitutes accessible content,
these guidelines rely on the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
1.0 [WCAG10]. Similarly, rather
than directly reproducing existing specifications that address
general accessible software design, these guidelines rely on
other sources. The present guidelines do address accessible
design considerations specific to Web authoring tools such as
providing flexible editing views, navigation aids and access to
display properties for authors.
The principles set forth in these guidelines will benefit many
people who do not have a disability but who have similar needs.
This includes people who work in noisy or quiet environments
where the use of sound is not practical, people who need to use
their eyes for another task and are unable to view a screen, and
people who use small mobile devices that have a small screen, no
keyboard, and no mouse.
A separate document, entitled "Techniques for Authoring Tool
Accessibility Guidelines 1.0" [ATAG10-TECHS],
provides suggestions and examples of how each checkpoint might be
satisfied. It also includes references to other accessibility
resources (such as platform-specific software accessibility
guidelines) that provide additional information on how a tool may
satisfy each checkpoint. Readers are strongly encouraged to
become familiar with the Techniques Document as well as
"Techniques for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0"
[WCAG10-TECHS] and
"Techniques for User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0"
[UAAG10-TECHS].
Note: The techniques in
[ATAG10-TECHS] are
informative examples only. Other strategies may be used to
satisfy the checkpoints in addition to, or in place of, those
discussed in [ATAG10-TECHS].
Note: Authoring tools that conform to this
document will propagate accessible Web content and be useful to
anyone regardless of disability. There will also be authoring
tools that produce accessible content in favorable circumstances
(e.g., a text editor used by a motivated author), or provide an
accessible interface to authors with certain disabilities, but
that do not conform to these guidelines.
The seven guidelines in this document are general principles
for accessible design. Each guideline includes:
- The guideline number;
- The statement of the guideline;
- The rationale behind the guideline;
- A list of checkpoint definitions.
The checkpoint definitions in each guideline specify
requirements for authoring tools to follow the guideline. Each
checkpoint definition includes:
- The checkpoint number;
- The statement of the checkpoint;
- The priority of the checkpoint;
- In some cases informative notes, clarifying examples, or
cross references to related guidelines or checkpoints;
- A link to a section of "Techniques for Authoring Tool
Accessibility Guidelines 1.0" [ATAG10-TECHS] where
implementations and examples of the checkpoint are
discussed.
Each checkpoint is intended to be specific enough that it can
be verified, while being sufficiently general to allow developers
the freedom to use the most appropriate strategies to satisfy
it.
An appendix to this specification
[ATAG10-CHECKLIST]
lists all checkpoints for convenient reference.
Each checkpoint has a priority level. The priority level
reflects the impact of the checkpoint in meeting the goals of
this specification. These goals are:
- That the authoring tool be accessible;
- That the authoring tool produce accessible content by
default;
- That the authoring tool encourage the creation of
accessible content.
The priority levels are assigned as follows:
-
[Priority
1]
- If the checkpoint is essential to meeting the goals.
-
[Priority
2]
- If the checkpoint is important to meeting the goals.
- [Priority
3]
- If the checkpoint is beneficial to meeting the
goals.
-
[Relative
Priority]
-
Some checkpoints that refer to generating, authoring, or
checking Web content have multiple priorities. The priority
depends on the corresponding priority in the Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines
(WCAG)
1.0 [WCAG10].
- It is priority 1 to satisfy the checkpoint for
content features that are a priority 1 requirement in
WCAG
1.0.
- It is priority 2 to satisfy the checkpoint for
content features that are a priority 2 requirement in
WCAG
1.0.
- It is priority 3 to satisfy the checkpoint for
content features that are a priority 3 requirement in
WCAG
1.0.
For example:
- Providing
text equivalents for images and audio is a
priority 1 requirement in
WCAG
1.0 since without it one or more groups will find it
impossible to access the information. Therefore, it is a
priority 1 requirement for the authoring tool to check
for (4.1) or ask the author for
(3.1) equivalent alternatives for these
types of content.
- Grouping links in navigation bars is a priority 3 in
WCAG
1.0. Therefore, it is only priority 3 for the
authoring tool to check for
(4.1) or ask the author for
(3.2) groups of links that are not
grouped in the markup as a navigation mechanism.
-
When a checkpoint in this document refers to the
WCAG
1.0 [WCAG10], only the
WCAG
1.0 checkpoints that refer to content supported or
automatically generated by the authoring tool apply. Some
of the applicable
WCAG
1.0 checkpoints may be satisfied automatically (without
author participation) while others require human judgment
and support from the tool in the form of prompts and
documentation. Different tools may satisfy the same
checkpoint differently.
The priority level for each checkpoint has been chosen based
on the assumption that the author is a competent, but not
necessarily expert, user of the authoring tool, and that the
author has little or no knowledge of accessibility. For
example, the author is not expected to have read all of the
documentation, but is expected to know how to turn to the
documentation for assistance.
This section explains how to make a
valid claim that an authoring
tool conforms to this document. Anyone may make a claim (e.g.,
vendors about their own products, third parties about those
products, journalists about products, etc.). Claims may be
published anywhere (e.g., on the Web or in product
documentation).
Claimants are solely responsible for their claims and the use
of the conformance icons. If the
subject of the claim (i.e., the software) changes after the date
of the claim, the claimant is responsible for updating the claim.
Claimants are encouraged to conform to the most recent guidelines
available.
Details about the conformance
icons are provided on the Web (refer to
[CONFORMANCE]).
A conformance claim must indicate what conformance level is
met:
-
Conformance Level "A": all Priority 1
checkpoints (including Relative Priority checkpoints) are
satisfied.
-
Conformance Level "Double-A": all Priority
1 and 2 checkpoints (including Relative Priority checkpoints)
are satisfied.
-
Conformance Level "Triple-A": all Priority
1, 2, and 3 checkpoints (including Relative Priority
checkpoints) are satisfied.
Note: Conformance levels are spelled out in
text (e.g., "Double-A" rather than "AA") so they may be
understood when rendered as speech.
A well-formed claim must include the following
information:
- The guidelines title/version: "Authoring Tool Accessibility
Guidelines 1.0";
- The URI of the guidelines:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-ATAG10-20000203;
- The conformance level
satisfied: "A", "Double-A", or "Triple-A";
- The version number and operating system of the software
covered by the claim. Also indicate whether any upgrades or
plug-ins are required;
- The date of the claim;
- The checkpoints of the chosen conformance level considered
not applicable. Claimants should use the checklist
[ATAG10-CHECKLIST]
for this purpose.
This information may be provided in text or metadata markup
(e.g., using the Resource Description Framework
(RDF) [RDF10] and an
RDF schema designed for WAI conformance
claims). All content in the claim must be accessible according to
the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
[WCAG10].
Here is an example of a claim expressed in HTML:
<p>MyAuthoringTool version 2.3 on MyOperatingSystem
conforms to <abbr title="the World Wide Web
Consortium">W3C</abbr>'s "Authoring Tool Accessibility
Guidelines 1.0", available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-ATAG10-20000203, level Double-A.
Details of this claim are provided at <a
href="http://somewhere.com/details">
http://somewhere.com/details</a>.</p>
A conformance claim is valid for a given
conformance level if:
- The claim is well-formed,
and
- The authoring tool satisfies all the checkpoints for that
level.
Claimants (or relevant assuring parties) are responsible for
the validity of a claim. As of the publication of this document,
W3C does not act as an assuring party, but it may do so in the
future, or establish recommendations for assuring parties.
Claimants are expected to modify or retract a claim if it may
be demonstrated that the claim is not valid. Please note that it
is not currently possible to validate claims completely
automatically.
As part of a conformance claim, people may use a conformance
icon on a Web site, on product packaging, in documentation, etc.
Each conformance icon (chosen according to the appropriate
conformance level) must link to
the W3C explanation of the icon. The appearance of a conformance
icon does not imply that W3C has reviewed or validated the claim.
An icon must be accompanied by a
well-formed claim.
If the tool automatically generates markup, many authors will
be unaware of the accessibility status of the final content
unless they expend extra effort to review it and make appropriate
corrections by hand. Since many authors are unfamiliar with
accessibility, authoring tools are responsible for automatically
generating accessible markup, and where appropriate, for guiding
the author in producing accessible content.
Many applications feature the ability to convert
documents
from other formats (e.g., Rich Text Format) into a markup format
specifically intended for the Web such as HTML. Markup changes
may also be made to facilitate efficient editing and
manipulation. It is essential that these processes do not
introduce
inaccessible markup or remove accessibility content,
particularly when a tool hides the markup changes from the
author's view.
Checkpoints:
-
1.1
Ensure
that the author can produce
accessible content
in the markup
language(s) supported by the tool.
[Priority 1]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 1.1
-
1.2
Ensure that the
tool preserves all
accessibility
information during authoring,
transformations,
and conversions.
[Priority 1]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 1.2
-
1.3
Ensure that
when the tool automatically generates markup it conforms to the
W3C's Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 [WCAG10].
[Relative Priority]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 1.3
-
1.4
Ensure
that templates provided by the tool conform to the Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 [WCAG10].
[Relative Priority]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 1.4
Conformance with standards promotes interoperability and
accessibility by making it easier to create specialized
user
agents that address the needs of users with
disabilities. In particular, many assistive technologies used
with browsers and multimedia players are only able to provide
access to Web documents
that use valid markup. Therefore, valid markup is an essential
aspect of authoring tool accessibility.
Where applicable use
W3C
Recommendations, which have been reviewed to ensure accessibility
and interoperability. If there are no applicable
W3C
Recommendations, use a published standard that enables
accessibility.
Checkpoints:
-
2.1
Use the latest versions of
W3C
Recommendations when they are available and appropriate for a
task. [Priority 2]
- W3C specifications have undergone review specifically to
ensure that they do not compromise accessibility, and where
possible, they enhance it.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 2.1
-
2.2
Ensure that the
tool automatically generates valid markup.
[Priority 1]
- This is necessary for user
agents to be able to render Web content in a manner
appropriate to a particular user's needs.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 2.2
-
2.3
If markup
produced by the tool does not conform to W3C specifications,
inform the author.
[Priority 3]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 2.3
Well-structured information and
equivalent alternative information are cornerstones of
accessible design, allowing information to be presented in a way
most appropriate for the needs of the user without constraining
the creativity of the author. Yet producing equivalent
information, such as text alternatives for images and auditory
descriptions of video, can be one of the most challenging aspects
of Web design, and authoring tool developers should attempt to
facilitate and automate the mechanics of this process. For
example, prompting authors to include equivalent alternative
information such as
text equivalents, captions,
and
auditory descriptions at appropriate times can greatly
ease the burden for authors. Where such information can be
mechanically determined and offered as a choice for the author
(e.g., the function of icons in an automatically-generated
navigation bar, or expansion of acronyms from a dictionary), the
tool can assist the author. At the same time, the tool can
reinforce the need for such information and the author's role in
ensuring that it is used appropriately in each instance.
Checkpoints:
-
3.1
Prompt the author to
provide equivalent alternative
information (e.g.,
captions,
auditory descriptions,
and collated text
transcripts for video).
[Relative Priority]
-
Note: Some checkpoints in the Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 [WCAG10] may not
apply.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 3.1
-
3.2
Help the
author create structured content and separate information from
its presentation.
[Relative Priority]
-
Note: Some checkpoints
in Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
[WCAG10] may not
apply.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 3.2
-
3.3
Ensure that
prepackaged content conforms to the Web Content Accessibility
Guidelines 1.0 [WCAG10].
[Relative Priority]
- For example, include captions,
an
auditory description, and a
collated
text transcript with prepackaged movies.
Refer also to
checkpoint 3.4.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 3.3
-
3.4
Do not automatically
generate equivalent
alternatives. Do not reuse previously authored alternatives
without author confirmation, except when the function is known
with certainty.
[Priority 1]
-
For example, prompt
the author for a
text equivalent of an image. If the author has
already provided a text equivalent for the same image used in
another document, offer to reuse that text and prompt the
author for confirmation. If the tool automatically generates
a "Search" icon, it would be appropriate to automatically
reuse the previously authored text equivalent for that icon.
Refer also to checkpoint 3.3 and
checkpoint
3.5.
Note: Human-authored equivalent
alternatives may be available for an object (for example,
through checkpoint 3.5 and/or
checkpoint
3.3). It is appropriate for the tool to offer these to
the author as defaults.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 3.4
-
3.5
Provide
functionality for managing, editing, and reusing
alternative equivalents
for multimedia objects.
[Priority 3]
-
Note: These alternative equivalents may be
packaged with the tool, written by the author, retrieved from
the Web, etc.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 3.5
Many authoring tools allow authors to create documents with
little or no knowledge about the underlying markup. To ensure
accessibility, authoring tools must be designed so that they can
(where possible, automatically) identify
inaccessible markup, and enable its correction even
when the markup itself is hidden from the author.
Authoring tool support for the creation of accessible Web
content should account for different authoring styles. Authors
who can configure the tool's accessibility features to support
their regular work patterns are more likely to accept accessible
authoring practices (refer to
guideline
5). For example, some authors may prefer to be alerted to
accessibility problems when they occur, whereas others
may prefer to perform a check at the end of an editing session.
This is analogous to programming environments that allow users to
decide whether to check for correct code during editing or at
compilation.
Note: Validation of markup is an essential
aspect of checking the accessibility of content.
Checkpoints:
-
4.1
Check for and
inform the author of
accessibility
problems.
[Relative Priority]
-
Note: Accessibility
problems should be detected automatically where possible. Where
this is not possible, the tool may need to
prompt
the author to make decisions or to manually check for certain
types of problems.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 4.1
-
4.2
Assist authors
in correcting
accessibility
problems.
[Relative Priority]
- At a minimum, provide context-sensitive
help with the accessibility checking required by
checkpoint
4.1
-
Techniques for checkpoint 4.2
-
4.3
Allow the author to
preserve markup not recognized by the tool.
[Priority 2]
-
Note: The author may
have included or imported markup that enhances accessibility
but is not recognized by the tool.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 4.3
-
4.4
Provide the author
with a summary of the document's accessibility status.
[Priority 3]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 4.4
-
4.5
Allow the author
to transform
presentation
markup that is misused to convey structure into
structural
markup, and to transform presentation markup used for style
into style sheets.
[Priority 3]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 4.5
When a new feature is added to an existing software tool
without proper integration, the result is often an obvious
discontinuity. Differing color schemes, fonts, interaction
styles, and even software stability can be factors affecting
author acceptance of the new feature. In addition, the relative
prominence of different ways to accomplish the same task can
influence which one the author chooses. Therefore, it is
important that creating accessible content be a natural process
when using an authoring tool.
Checkpoints:
-
5.1
Ensure that
functionality related to
accessible
authoring practices is naturally integrated into the
overall look and feel of the tool.
[Priority 2]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 5.1
-
5.2
Ensure that
accessible
authoring practices supporting Web Content Accessibility
Guidelines 1.0 [WCAG10] Priority 1
checkpoints are among the most obvious and easily initiated by
the author.
[Priority 2]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 5.2
Web authors may not be familiar with accessibility issues that
arise when creating Web content. Therefore, help and
documentation must include explanations of
accessibility problems, and should demonstrate
solutions with examples.
Checkpoints:
-
6.1
Document all
features that promote the production of accessible content.
[Priority 1]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 6.1
-
6.2
Ensure
that creating accessible content is a naturally integrated
part of the documentation, including examples.
[Priority 2]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 6.2
-
6.3
In a
dedicated section, document all features of the tool that
promote the production of accessible content.
[Priority 3]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 6.3
The authoring tool is a software program with standard user
interface elements and as such must be designed according to
relevant user interface accessibility guidelines. When custom
interface components are created, it is essential that they be
accessible through the standard access mechanisms for the
relevant platform so that assistive technologies can be used with
them.
Some additional user interface design considerations apply
specifically to Web
authoring tools. For instance, authoring tools must
ensure that the author can edit (in an editing
view) using one set of stylistic preferences and
publish using different styles. Authors with low vision may need
large text when editing but want to publish with a smaller
default text size. The style preferences of the editing view must
not affect the markup of the published document.
Authoring tools must also ensure that the author can navigate
a document efficiently while editing, regardless of disability.
Authors who use screen readers, refreshable braille displays, or
screen magnifiers can make limited use (if at all) of graphical
artifacts that communicate the structure of the document and act
as signposts when traversing it. Authors who cannot use a mouse
(e.g., people with physical disabilities or who are blind) must
use the slow and tiring process of moving one step at a time
through the document to access the desired content, unless more
efficient navigation methods are available. Authoring tools
should therefore provide an editing
view that conveys a sense of the overall structure and
allows structured navigation.
Note: Documentation, help files, and
installation are part of the software and need to be available in
an accessible
form.
Checkpoints:
-
7.1
Use all
applicable operating system and accessibility standards and
conventions (Priority 1 for standards and conventions that are
essential to accessibility; Priority 2 for those that are
important to accessibility; Priority 3 for those that are
beneficial to accessibility).
- The techniques for this checkpoint include references to
checklists and guidelines for a number of platforms and to
general guidelines for accessible
applications.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 7.1
-
7.2
Allow the author
to change the presentation within
editing views without
affecting the document markup.
[Priority 1]
- This allows the author to edit the document according to
personal requirements, without changing the way the document is
rendered when published.
-
Techniques for checkpoint 7.2
-
7.3
Allow the author to
edit all properties of
each element and object
in an accessible fashion.
[Priority 1]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 7.3
-
7.4
Ensure that the
editing view allows
navigation via the structure of the document in an accessible
fashion. [Priority 1]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 7.4
-
7.5
Enable editing of the
structure of the document in an accessible fashion.
[Priority 2]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 7.5
-
7.6
Allow the author to
search within editing
views.
[Priority 2]
-
Techniques for checkpoint 7.6
-
Accessibility
(Also:
Accessible
)
- Within these guidelines, "accessible Web content" and
"accessible authoring tool" mean that the content and tool can
be used by people regardless of disability.
-
To understand the accessibility issues relevant to authoring
tool design, consider that many authors may be creating
content in contexts very different from your own:
- They may not be able to see, hear, move, or may not be
able to process some types of information easily or at
all;
- They may have difficulty reading or comprehending
text;
- They may not have or be able to use a keyboard or
mouse;
- They may have a text-only display, or a small
screen.
- Accessible design will benefit people in these different
authoring scenarios and also many people who do not have a
physical disability but who have similar needs. For example,
someone may be working in a noisy environment and thus require
an alternative representation of audio information. Similarly,
someone may be working in an eyes-busy environment and thus
require an audio equivalent to information they cannot view.
Users of small mobile devices (with small screens, no keyboard,
and no mouse) have similar functional needs as some users with
disabilities.
-
Accessibility
Information
- "Accessibility information" is content, including
information and markup, that is used to improve the
accessibility of a document. Accessibility information
includes, but is not limited to,
equivalent alternative information.
-
Accessibility
Problem
(Also:
Inaccessible
Markup
)
- Inaccessible Web content or authoring tools cannot be used
by some people with disabilities. The Web Content Accessibility
Guidelines 1.0 [WCAG10] describes how to
create accessible Web content.
-
Accessible Authoring
Practice
- "Accessible authoring practices" improve the accessibility
of Web content. Both authors and tools engage in accessible
authoring practices. For example, authors write clearly,
structure their content, and provide navigation aids. Tools
automatically generate valid markup and assist authors in
providing and managing appropriate equivalent
alternatives.
-
Alert
- An "alert" draws the author's attention to an event or
situation. It may require a response from the author.
-
Alternative
Information
(Also:
Equivalent
Alternative
)
- Content is "equivalent" to other content when both fulfill
essentially the same function or purpose upon presentation to
the user. Equivalent alternatives play an important role in
accessible authoring practices since certain types of content
may not be accessible to all users (e.g., video, images, audio,
etc.). Authors are encouraged to provide text equivalents for
non-text content since text may be rendered as synthesized
speech for individuals who have visual or learning
disabilities, as braille for individuals who are blind, or as
graphical text for individuals who are deaf or do not have a
disability. For more information about equivalent alternatives,
please refer to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
WCAG
1.0 [WCAG10].
-
Attribute
- This document uses the term "attribute" as used in SGML and
XML ([XML]): Element types may be
defined as having any number of attributes. Some attributes are
integral to the accessibility of content (e.g., the
"alt", "title", and
"longdesc" attributes in HTML).
-
Auditory
Description
- An "auditory description" provides information about
actions, body language, graphics, and scene changes in a video.
Auditory descriptions are commonly used by people who are blind
or have low vision, although they may also be used as a
low-bandwidth equivalent on the Web. An auditory description is
either a pre-recorded human voice or a synthesized voice
(recorded or automatically generated in real time). The
auditory description must be synchronized with the auditory
track of a video presentation, usually during natural pauses in
the auditory track.
-
Authoring
Tool
-
An "authoring tool" is any software that is used to produce
content for publishing on the Web. Authoring tools include:
- Editing tools specifically designed to produce Web
content (e.g., WYSIWYG HTML and XML editors);
- Tools that offer the option of saving material in a Web
format (e.g., word processors or desktop publishing
packages);
- Tools that transform documents into Web formats (e.g.,
filters to transform desktop publishing formats to
HTML);
- Tools that produce multimedia, especially where it is
intended for use on the Web (e.g., video production and
editing suites, SMIL authoring packages);
- Tools for site management or site publication,
including tools that automatically generate Web sites
dynamically from a database, on-the-fly conversion and Web
site publishing tools;
- Tools for management of layout (e.g., CSS formatting
tools).
-
Captions
- "Captions" are essential
text equivalents for movie audio. Captions consist
of a text
transcript of the auditory track of the movie (or
other video presentation) that is synchronized with the video
and auditory tracks. Captions are generally rendered
graphically and benefit people who can see but are deaf,
hard-of-hearing, or cannot hear the audio.
-
Conversion
Tool
- A "conversion tool" is any application or application
feature (e.g., "Save as HTML") that transforms convent in one
format to another format (such as a markup language).
-
Check
for
-
As used in checkpoint 4.1, "check for" can refer to
three types of checking:
- In some instances, an authoring tool will be able to
check for accessibility problems automatically. For
example, checking for validity
(checkpoint 2.2) or testing whether an
image is the only content of a link.
- In some cases, the tool will be able to "suspect" or
"guess" that there is a problem, but will need confirmation
from the author. For example, in making sure that a
sensible reading order is preserved a tool can present a
linearized version of a page to the author.
- In some cases, a tool must rely mostly on the author,
and can only ask the author to check. For example, the tool
may prompt the author to verify that equivalent
alternatives for multimedia are appropriate. This is the
minimal standard to be satisfied. Subtle, rather than
extensive, prompting is more likely to be effective in
encouraging the author to verify accessibility where it
cannot be done automatically.
-
Document
- A "document" is a series of elements that are defined by a
markup language (e.g., HTML 4 or an XML
application).
-
Editing
View
- An "editing view" is a view
provided by the authoring tool that allows editing.
-
Element
- An "element" is any identifiable object within a document,
for example, a character, word, image, paragraph or spreadsheet
cell. In [HTML4] and
[XML], an
element refers to a pair of tags and their content, or an
"empty" tag - one that requires no closing tag or content.
-
Inform
- To "inform" is to make the author aware of an event or
situation through alert,
prompt,
sound, flash, or other means.
-
Markup
Language
- Authors encode information using a "markup language" such
as HTML [HTML4], SVG
[SVG], or
MathML [MATHML].
-
Presentation
Markup
- "Presentation markup" is
markup language that encodes information about the
desired presentation or layout of the content. For example,
Cascading Style Sheets ([CSS1], [CSS2]) can be used to
control fonts, colors, aural rendering, and graphical
positioning. Presentation markup should not be used in place of
structural markup to convey structure. For example,
authors should mark up lists in HTML with proper list markup
and style them with CSS (e.g., to control spacing, bullets,
numbering, etc.). Authors should not use other CSS or HTML
incorrectly to lay out content graphically so that it resembles
a list.
-
Prompt
- A "prompt" is a request for author input, either
information or a decision. A prompt requires author response.
For example, a
text equivalent entry field prominently displayed in
an image insertion dialog would constitute a prompt. Prompts
can be used to encourage authors to provide information needed
to make content accessible (such as
alternative text equivalents).
-
Property
- A "property" is a piece of information about an element,
for example structural information (e.g., it is item number 7
in a list, or plain text) or presentation information (e.g.,
that it is marked as bold, its font size is 14). In XML and
HTML, properties of an element include the type of the element
(e.g.,
IMG or DL), the values of its
attributes,
and information associated by means of a style sheet. In a
database, properties of a particular element may include values
of the entry, and acceptable data types for that entry.
-
Structural
Markup
- "Structural markup" is
markup language that encodes information about the
structural role of elements of the content. For example,
headings, sections, members of a list, and components of a
complex diagram can be identified using structural markup.
Structural markup should not be used incorrectly to control
presentation or layout. For example, authors should not use the
BLOCKQUOTE element in HTML [HTML4] to achieve an
indentation visual layout effect. Structural markup should be
used correctly to communicate the roles of the elements of the
content and
presentation markup should be used separately to
control the presentation and layout.
-
Transcript
- A "transcript" is a text representation of sounds in an
audio clip or an auditory track of a multimedia presentation. A
"collated text transcript" for a video combines (collates)
caption text with text descriptions of video information
(descriptions of the actions, body language, graphics, and
scene changes of the visual track). Collated text transcripts
are essential for individuals who are deaf-blind and rely on
braille for access to movies and other content.
-
Transformation
- A "transformation" is a process that changes a document or
object into another, equivalent, object according to a discrete
set of rules. This includes
conversion tools, software that allows the author to
change the DTD
defined for the original document to another
DTD, and the
ability to change the markup of lists and convert them into
tables.
-
User
Agent
- A "user agent" is software that retrieves and renders Web
content. User agents include browsers, plug-ins for a
particular media type, and some assistive technologies.
-
View
- Authoring tools may render the same content in a variety of
ways; each rendering is called a "view." Some authoring tools
will have several different types of view, and some allow views
of several documents at once. For instance, one view may show
raw markup, a second may show a structured tree, a third may
show markup with rendered objects while a final view shows an
example of how the document may appear if it were to be
rendered by a particular browser. A typical way to distinguish
views in a graphic environment is to place each in a separate
window.
Many thanks to the following people who have contributed
through review and comment: Jim Allan, Denis Anson, Kitch
Barnicle, Kynn Bartlett, Harvey Bingham, Judy Brewer, Carl Brown,
Dick Brown, Wendy Chisholm, Aaron Cohen, Rob Cumming, Daniel
Dardailler, Mark Day, BK Delong, Martin Dürst, Kelly Ford,
Jamie Fox, Edna French, Sylvain Galineau, Al Gilman, Jon
Gunderson, Eric Hansen, Phill Jenkins, Len Kasday, Brian Kelly,
Marja-Riitta Koivunen, Sho Kuwamoto, Jaap van Lelieveld, Susan
Lesch, William Loughborough, Greg Lowney, Karen McCall, Thierry
Michel, Charles Oppermann, Dave Pawson, Dave Poehlman, Loretta
Reid, Bruce Roberts, Chris Ridpath, Gregory Rosmaita, Bridie
Saccocio, Janina Sajka, John Slatin, Jim Thatcher, Irčne
Vatton, Gregg Vanderheiden, Pawan Vora, Jason White, and Lauren
Wood.
For the latest version of any
W3C
specification please consult the list of
W3C Technical Reports at http://www.w3.org/TR.
-
[ATAG10-CHECKLIST]
- An appendix to this document lists all of the checkpoints,
sorted by priority. The checklist is available in either
tabular form (at
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-ATAG10-20000203/atag10-chktable)
or list form (at
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-ATAG10-20000203/atag10-chklist).
-
[ATAG10-TECHS]
- "Techniques for
Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0," J.
Treviranus, J. Richards, I. Jacobs, and C. McCathieNevile eds.
The latest version is available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/ATAG10-TECHS.
-
[CONFORMANCE]
-
"Conformance
icons for ATAG 1.0." Information about ATAG
1.0 conformance icons is available at
http://www.w3.org/WAI/ATAG10-Conformance.
-
[CSS1]
- "CSS,
level 1 Recommendation," B. Bos and H. Wium Lie, eds., 17
December 1996, revised 11 January 1999. This CSS1
Recommendation is http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-CSS1-19990111.
The latest version of
CSS1 is available at http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS1.
Note: CSS1 has been superseded by CSS2. Tools
should implement the CSS2 cascade.
-
[CSS2]
- "CSS,
level 2 Recommendation," B. Bos, H. Wium Lie, C. Lilley,
and I. Jacobs, eds., 12 May 1998. This CSS2 Recommendation is
http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-CSS2-19980512. The
latest version of
CSS2 is available at http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2.
-
[HTML4]
-
"HTML
4.01 Recommendation," D. Raggett, A. Le Hors, and I.
Jacobs, eds., 24 December 1999. This HTML 4.01 Recommendation
is http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-html401-19991224. The
latest version of HTML
4 is available at http://www.w3.org/TR/html4.
-
[MATHML]
-
"Mathematical
Markup Language," P. Ion and R. Miner, eds., 7 April 1998,
revised 7 July 1999. This MathML 1.0 Recommendation is
http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-MathML-19990707. The
latest version of
MathML 1.0 is available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-MathML.
-
[RDF10]
-
"Resource
Description Framework (RDF) Model and Syntax
Specification," O. Lassila, R. Swick, eds. The 22 February
1999 Recommendation is
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-rdf-syntax-19990222. The
latest version of
RDF 1.0 is available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-rdf-syntax.
-
[SVG]
- "Scalable Vector
Graphics (SVG) 1.0 Specification (Working Draft)," J.
Ferraiolo, ed. The latest version of the SVG specification is
available at http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG.
-
[UAAG10-TECHS]
- "Techniques
for User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0," J. Gunderson,
and I. Jacobs, eds. The
latest version of
Techniques for User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 is
available at http://www.w3.org/TR/UAAG10-TECHS/.
-
[WCAG10]
-
"Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0," W. Chisholm, G.
Vanderheiden, and I. Jacobs, eds., 5 May 1999. This
Recommendation is
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/WAI-WEBCONTENT-19990505. The latest
version of the Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0" is available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG10/.
-
[WCAG10-TECHS]
- "Techniques
for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0," W. Chisholm,
G. Vanderheiden, and I. Jacobs, eds. The
latest version of
Techniques for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 is
available at http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG10-TECHS/.
-
[XML]
- "The
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0," T. Bray, J. Paoli,
C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, eds., 10 February 1998. This XML 1.0
Recommendation is http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-xml-19980210.
The latest version of
the XML specification is available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml.